| The Karan Acoustics KA-S 450
Amplifier |
| Welcome to the Big Time |
| |
|
December 2006 |

For a few simple reasons, amplifiers have been
my favorite link in the audio chain to review.
My library of reviews will attest to that. I
think it is the set it up, turn it on and
“show me what you can do” simplicity of an
amplifier that makes it so appealing. Even if
you want to, there is not a ton you can do to
tweak an amp. There are stands and power
chords, that’s about it. Sure you can throw a
brick on top or paste a dot on the transformer
but in my experience, those types of additions
may take any given amp further down the road
but in the end, the overall character of the
amp typically remains in tact. At the time of
this writing, Avatar Acoustics (the U.S.
Distributor) offers an Acoustic Systems
Resonator inside the amplifier as an
additional cost option.
The subject of this review, the Karan KA-S 450
is the most expensive amp I have had in house.
At $21,000, it occupies a place in a select
group of amplifiers that wear the “cost no
object” badge and thus, begs to be judged and
scrutinized upon a much higher level of
expectations.
What exactly are those expectations? For my
tastes and system demands, I must have an
amplifier that can deliver nearly unlimited
power and driver control, all the while
preserving the delicacy, color, detail and air
on the recording. While nearly all amplifier
manufacturers claim to meet these needs, we
all know, and try to accept the fact that
these objectives are met with varying degrees
of success regardless of price.
Before we get to the sonics, a little about
the specs. The KA-S 450 is a true dual mono,
fully balanced design requiring two separate
power cords. Keeping the signal path as short
as possible, the KA-S 450 sports gold plated
circuit boards and twenty fairly exotic ultra
fast Sanken RET output devices per channel
with total current capability of 400 Amperes.
The KA-S 450 uses four stages of voltage
regulation and each channel uses a 1,500 VA
low loss toroidal transformer with 188.000 mF
of capacitance. What is pretty unique about
the KA-S 450 is its unusually high damping
factor- better than 10,000 into 8 Ohms,
20Hz-20kHz. This spec goes a long way in
accounting for the KA-S 450’s fantastic bass
response and over all sense of composure. While
the KA-S 450 does not double down its power
rating as a big Krell may, its rated power
output of 450/810/1,500W into 8/4/2 Ohms is
pretty impressive and left no sense of strain
on swelling or sudden shifts of high level
dynamics. The KA-S 450 is an all Class A
design employing no overall negative feed
back.
Build quality is first rate, though the 450
lacks hand-handles making the 167 lb. amp a
chore to move. Adding injury to inconvenience,
the heat sinks on the KA-S 450 are covered in
saw like teeth, adding a significant amount of
surface area in which to dissipate heat. So if
you have not figured it out were this is
going, do not grab the KA-S 450 by the heat
sinks when moving it. It hurts, a lot. As for
aesthetics, I find the overall look pleasant
if a bit dated. Picture a spruced up Levinson
circa 1990. I may be a bit to critical on this
issue but I have owned some really slick
looking amps from the likes of Gryphon and
Pass Labs. With this level of industrial
engineering, I can attest to a level of pride
in ownership that adds value to the high-end
experience.
Daren Censullo of Avatar Acoustics started
making noise about the KA-S 450 a few months
before 2006 CES. I am quite familiar with much
of the gear Censullo represents so I had to pay
attention when he began to sing its praises.
The amp arrived shortly after the CES and
quickly took up a position between the newly
arrived Von Schweikert VR7SE and was promptly
pressed into service. Censullo warned me that the
amp required about 200 hours of burn-in and he
was largely correct. Upon first listen, the
amp was a bit too dark and a little slow
sounding. There just wasn’t the jump factor
the KA-S 450 watts should provide. I settled
in for the long haul and let the amp really
cook before I would firm up my impressions.
Within the month the sound really opened up
and the transient response was much cleaner,
lending a fine sense of pace and impact.
During this time it became quite clear that
this was going to be one ear opening
experience.
As far as analog amplifiers go, no other amp I
have heard balances such an array of virtues
leaving so little to criticize. First off, the
KA-S 450 is the most organic/least electronic
sounding solid-state amp I have heard to date.
This organic quality comes to the KA-S 450
honestly. There is little softening, smearing
or homogenization to the sound to “simulate”
natural realism. It is by way of resolution
and a deep sense of silence that this wonder
full quality comes to light. Purity of
instrumental tone, vocals and ambient space
are all extremely well resolved. Tube lovers
looking for a powerhouse amp should look no
further. It is here that the KA-S 450 really
distances itself from the competition but
remember, for me to really fall for this amp,
it must go further to prove it’s metal.
You would think that a contemporary
solid-state amplifier of its rating would have
no difficulty whatsoever controlling a
speaker. The KA-S 450 does not disappoint.
With the KA-S 450’s unusually high damping
factor it would lead one to expect iron-fisted
control over the entire frequency range. The
KA-S 450 does in fact inspire great
confidence, as the music that comes out of the
amplifier gives very little clue that it has
taxed the amp. Having said that, the bass of
the Karan is a bit different than that of
another amp I have on hand for review, the new
Pass X-350.5. Both amps go very low with ease,
but differ in a couple of ways. The KA-S 450’s
bass is warm and full bodied while the Pass is
more linear and sounds perhaps a bit faster.
Whether the Pass is restricting some harmonics
or the KAS 450 is heavier handed, I do not yet
want to draw specific conclusions as to which
is correct as both presentations integrate and
make sense within the context of its own sonic
palette.
As for the rest of the spectrum, music had at
once, a wonderful architecture by way of
confident imaging and sound staging while
somehow sounding completely relaxed and
liquid.
The
ability to render a solid three-dimensional
image without resorting to thickening of
textures or blunting harmonics was extremely
convincing. Listening to Stanley Clark’s self
titled East River Drive as
I have a million times, the flute that takes
over the lead mid way through the song sounded
very convincing. For once there is the
harmonic, resonant signature with all the
texture that had gone MIA within the congested
innards of other amps. The low bass instrument
had trigger finger quickness despite its
staggering extension and power. The
synthesizer, despite being awash in reverb,
sounded sweet and very open. These traits
would prove to be great gifts on all but the
worst of recordings that simply have nothing
to offer.
Dynamics proved to be very special.
Strapped to the Von Schweikert Audio VR7 SE by
way of Virtual Dynamics
Revelation Signature cables followed by the Audioquest Everest and the latest offering
from Vitus audio allowed for varied examples
of this amplifiers dynamic
prowess.
If
you don’t have Deep Purple’s Machine Head, get it. Even if you are not a
huge fan, this is a great album with a really
cool studio feel. Instruments are represented
in life size with great dynamics and nearly no
edge to be found save the organ that floods
the opening of what I think is the best track
on the album, Lazy. This bar room brawl of a
performance fly’s free of the speakers and
really does give, if even for a few moments,
the experience of having Deep Purple in the
house. Leading edge transients are so clean,
so fast; the music has great traction and
really swings. True, most competent components
can create the image on the stage, and give a
nice clean account of the music, but add the
power, texture and control provided by the Karan and the experience fundamentally
changes.
Is there a fatal flaw to be found that
tarnishes the other wise superlative KA-S 450?
No. Is the KA-S 450 without any flaw at all?
Almost. After having spent much time with the
Boz digital amplifier, there is immediacy and
light in the upper registers that the best
digital amplifiers reproduce that can make
even the best analog amps sound comparatively
a shade darker with less sparkle in the
treble. I don’t feel short changed by this
characteristic, but I cannot deny that it is
there, if even to a very small degree. On its
own merits, the KA-S 450 strikes a fantastic
balance and just may have rung out nearly all
there is to be had from analog technology.
Short of the $60K Behold amplifier, I
have not heard an analog or digital amp that
comes even close to striking such an artful
balance of strengths. In particular, the KA-S
450 has the ability to put real flesh on the
bones of an instrument or vocal. Nor do the
digital amps I have heard have near the bass
control, dynamics or bottom end extension.
Perhaps the Karan monos take the treble
further into the light than the KA-S 450, but
that cannot be confirmed at this time.
But be warned, all these wonderful traits can
vanish like President Bush during a crisis if
the up stream gear is at all under performing.
It was the inclusion of the Nova Acoustics
Memory Player digital play back system that
showed just how far the performance
capabilities of the KA-S 450 could be
stretched. Without getting too far into it, I
simply did not think sound like this was
available in my system. With the KA-S 450 in
the chain, I was treated to a glimpse into the
future, via the present. The stunning
neutrality provided by the Nova Physics Memory
Player reveals the individual sonic
shapes/signature from recording to recording
as well as differences between the engineering
techniques from track to track. Change the
disc, everything changes right along with it.
This adds much to the drama and intimate
individual relationship we all have with our
favorite music and recordings. Unlike some
other high-resolution analog amps that have
become popular as of late, there is no cool or
dry signature to the KA-S 450. It can go from
sumptuous to skeletal just by advancing the
track.
It would be great to throw the Karan over my
shoulder and take it on a shoot out tour
around the east coast to really broaden my
depth of understanding of the KA-S 450. Having
both the Focus Audio Master II along with the
Von Schweikert VR7SE have allowed me to get
enough of a perspective to draw the above
conclusions, but when I come across a
special product like this, I want to take it
to the streets.
Conclusion
The KA-S 450 is
the kind of amplifier many will be very happy
to live with deep into the future. Such power
and finesse, it’s like finding peanut butter
in your chocolate - a very tasty surprise. No
bones about it, the Karan KA-S 450 is a truly
special amplifier that should send shudders up
and down the spines of manufacturers that may
have become a little too comfortable with
their successes of the past. But what about
the inevitable new kid on the block that shows
up with a Duracell on it’s shoulder with a ton
of attitude itching for a fight? At the KA-S
450 price point, there are no amplifiers in
the queue for review at the moment. The likes of
the $60k Behold amplifier system and the soon
to arrive $50k Vitas mono blocks,
however, are slated for a listen. While the
similarly priced Karan Monoblocks would be the
natural competition for the soon to arrive
challengers, this opportunity for comparison
will go a long way in determining where the KA-S
450 falls on an absolute scale. Yes, you can
spend a whole lot more on an amp. Whether that
money would be well spent is a story that must
wait for another day.
Greg Petan
________________________
Second Opinion from Key Kim
In
almost every way from just about every
perspective I have to concur with Greg Petan’s
full review of the Karan Acoustics KAS 450
power amplifier. Milan Karan, a newcomer from
Yugoslavia – and to the U.S audio scene – has
taken the super-high-fidelity game to a new
level with this stereo amplifier.
My curiosity about the KA-S 450 led it to be
my new reference amplifier. This all began
when I auditioned it for a weekend from Greg
Petan while I was in the middle of reviewing
the Conspiracy L loudspeaker. To cut to the
chase, I went out and bought the KS A 450
after this very short audition. Why? What
struck me right away, and set the mighty Karan
amp apart from everything previous in my
experiences, was its organic quality. It is
easily the least electronic sounding amp I
have heard to date and this magic persisted
throughout its range, from top to bottom
through my countless hours of listening.
With the KA-S 450 in my system, all types of
music sounded incredibly life-like. As good as
my reference Tact Audio Boz 216 digital amp
is, the KA-S 450 took me to an entirely
different level of musical enjoyment. There is
purity without ruthlessness, smoothness
without obscuring softness. The music flowed
in such a silky and velvety way, with notes so
richly expressed that compared to an already
great design in the Boz amplifier the KA-S 450
proved revelatory. The KA-S 450’s ability to
physically control the many Conspiracy Audio
drivers proved remarkable as well. With its pure 450 watts of Class-A
power supported by an oversized power supply,
one would assume that the KA-S 450 would be
nothing short of explosive or thunderous.
However, the Karan didn’t sound big and
powerful or polite - it simply did what the
music asked, no more, no less.

The Karan’s performance moved even further
into the stratosphere, when mated with its
Karan KAL Reference Dual Mono Preamplifier.
Teamed, I got to hear what the Karan
Acoustics’ sound really wanted to say.
Everything sounded more natural and less
emphasized thanks to its effortless power and
control. This is part of what makes it sound
more tonally correct, more natural and
organic. Amazingly, it had the ability to
reproduce sound with utmost transparency and
detail rivaling perhaps the best in that
department in the Boz amplifiers.
The KA-S 450
extracted more music from a recording while,
simultaneously, drawing this listener in. This
deft feat is rare in my opinion and it allows
this listener to be emotionally involved in
ways unlike before. Whether it was Beethoven’s
symphony or Jacintha accompanied by a quartet,
new shades and nuances were revealed in each
recording. While the soundstage remained
superbly reproduced, it now extended beyond
the speakers outer edges and far beyond my
listening room’s wall, making the speakers
vanish. The KA-S 450’s magic persisted
throughout its range, from the softest notes
to crashing crescendos. One good example would
be when listening to solo legend of our time,
such as Mstislav Rostropovich playing Johann
Sebastian Bach’s Cello suites (EMI 7243 5
55365 2). The result was simply breathtaking.
The added dimensionality was also quite
obvious as was solidity, focus and immediacy.
The nuances of subtle details, of bowing
texture and pitch variation, were vividly
presented.
The Karan Acoustics KA-S 450 represents the
pinnacle of design in amplifiers. The KA-S
450s magic is addictive; look what happened to
me, I bought it. Feed the KA-S 450 with the
best and it might give you what you never
thought was possible.
____________________
Specifications: -
Fully balanced topology; extremely
short signal path, 24k gold plated circuit
boards.
- 20 ultra fast Sanken RET output devices per
channel, with a total current capability of
400 amps.
- Channel separated power supplies from two
1500 VA toroidal power
transformers, 188,000mikroF filter bank and
four stages of stabilization.
- Frequency response DC-300kHz +0,-3dB.
- S/N ratio better than -112dB.
- Damping Factor better than 10,000:1 into 8
ohms, 20hz to 20khz.
- Current feedback topology, with no overall
feedback and with less than 0.03%.
- Intermodulation distortion at rated power
into 8 Ohms.
- Pink noise min RMS Power 450/810/1500 W into
8/4/2 Ohms.
- Dimensions 500x235x590 mm (19.7”x9.25”x23.2”
inch) WxHxD.
- Net weight 76kg (167lbs).
Price: $21,000.00 USD
U.S. Distributor
Contact Information:
Avatar Acoustics
Darren Censullo
13401 SW 96th Ave
Miami, FL 33176
Ph: 305-608-6079
Fax: 305-232-8310
DCensullo@AvatarAcoustics.com
www.AvatarAcoustics.com

|